147 Mo. App. 451 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910
The facts of this litigation will be found stated in the opinion delivered on the former appeal (131 Mo. App. 612). The proposition is reasserted on the present appeal that plaintiff’s employment by defendant was at will and not by the year. We held before the evidence went to prove it was by the year and adhere to the ruling; indeed, think the argument to the contrary is without force and the authorities cited to support it are not in point. In the conversation leading up' to the contract of employment, defendant’s officers said to plaintiff “about sis thousand dollars a year is as much as we want to pay for the first year;” further, one of the officers said to plaiatiff: “You will be raised as I have been right along every year after that;” he also said: “Six thousand dollars in St. Louis is better than $7500’ in New York.” The gist of the argument for defendant is, the contract was at the rate of six thousand dollars a year, but the period of the employment was not stipulated. We think the evidence not only tended to prove
An exception was taken to the exclusion of part of the deposition given by Fitzpatrick, one of defendant’s officers. The material portion of the excluded matter was a statement that Silverthorn, another officer of defendant, had told plaintiff in the conversation which resulted in the employment, the company had intended to offer plaintiff five thousand dollars a year, but to make it án inducement to him to come with the company, would pay him five hundred dollars a month, which was at the rate of six thousand dollars a year. This evidence is said to have been competent as tending to prove plaintiff’s employment was not by the
The judgment is affirmed.